Award winning actor Mark Ruffalo says he
is "baffled" at the collapse of the twin towers
and Building 7 on 9/11 and has called for re-opening the investigation
into the attacks, joining Martin Sheen in publicly doubting
the government's official story.

Ruffalo's notable film roles include Michel
Gondry's Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Academy
Award-nominated 2000 film You Can Count on Me and
most recently, 2007's Zodiac. He is a vocal critic
of the Iraq war having appeared on Democracy Now
and spoken at the October 2006 World Can't Wait protest in
New York City.

In an interview with We
Are Change L.A. at an anti-war rally in Los Angeles this
past weekend, Ruffalo said he was "baffled" with
how the twin towers and Building 7 came down, but cautioned
that so much information had been put out that the truth had
been "stretched" and that too many people were being
distracted by the more "sensational" aspects of
some claims made about 9/11 that were being fostered to "discredit
the movement."

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Ruffalo also slammed
the 9/11 Commission Report.

"The fact that the 9/11 investigation
went from the moment the planes hit to the moment the buildings
fell and nothing before and nothing after I think makes that
investigation completely illegitimate," said Ruffalo.

"If you're gonna do a crime investigation,
you have to find motive....and we didn't follow that, it was
quickly pushed away," he added.

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Ruffalo concurred that the immediate interference
in the crime scene as well as the initial appointment of Henry
Kissinger to head the 9/11 Commission were obvious signs that
the investigation was compromised, mandating a re-opening
of the inquiry.